Indigenous recording will prove history wrong

A dead technology is being revived in a riposte to the anthropologists who thought they had recorded the last Indigenous voice.
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For more than a century the wax cylinder recordings Horace Watson made of Fanny Cochrane Smith have been touted as the only sound recording of the traditional Tasmanian Aboriginal language.

The recordings of Smith singing, made in 1899 and 1903, were held up as an example of modern technology preserving a dying culture.  But in an ironic twist, the technology has died while the culture lives on.

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Deborah Stone
About the Author
Deborah Stone is a Melbourne journalist and communications professional. She is a former Editor of ArtsHub and a former Fairfax feature writer.